Sulfur Bricks
Sulfur Bricks are a decorative building block introduced alongside sulfur, a relatively recent mineral addition to Minecraft. Recognizable by their vivid yellow coloring, Sulfur Bricks also render as a matching yellow hue on in-game maps, making them easy to spot in overhead views. When placed beneath a note block, they produce a bass drum sound, and they interact with sulfur cubes using the Slow Bouncy archetype.
Sulfur Bricks can be crafted by arranging four Polished Sulfur in a 2×2 crafting grid, which yields four blocks in return. Alternatively, a stonecutter can convert either raw Sulfur or Polished Sulfur directly into Sulfur Bricks, offering a more flexible path for players who prefer that route.
Breaking Sulfur Bricks requires at least a wooden pickaxe; without one, the block drops nothing. They have a hardness of 1.5 and a blast resistance of 6, and they are neither flammable nor ignitable by lava, giving them a reasonable level of durability for a decorative block.
Sulfur Bricks also function as a crafting ingredient for several related blocks. Arranging three in a row produces six Sulfur Brick Slabs, a stair-shaped pattern yields four Sulfur Brick Stairs, and a 2×3 arrangement crafts six Sulfur Brick Walls. Through the stonecutter, a single Sulfur Bricks block can be cut into slabs, stairs, walls, or — in Bedrock Edition — Chiseled Sulfur.